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Parasites and Pathogens of Insects

Author : Nancy E. Beckage
Publisher : Academic Press
Page : 383 pages
File Size : 22,18 MB
Release : 2012-12-02
Category : Science
ISBN : 008091649X

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Both volumes of Parasites and Pathogens of Insects provide in-depth coverage of the interface between insect parasites and pathogens and hosts, and explore the relationships between these partners. They emphasize biochemical and molecular interactions, basic biology, and the roles of hormones, receptors, and other cellular components in modulating interactions between host insects and attacking agents. These topics also are assessed in relation to biotechnology and biological control. In the short term, these volumes fill a void in current literature by emphasizing basic interactions at the biochemical and molecular levels. In the long term, these interactions may provide avenues for exploitation to enhance the rate of "beneficial" parasitism or to reduce the rates of disease transmission and infection of vertebrate hosts. Presents the latest information on insect parasites and pathogens Describes biochemical and molecular host-parasite and host-pathogen relationships Covers mechanisms of insect pathogenicity and resistance Provides exceptional breadth of coverage and authoritative reviews Special topics Transposable elements in insect pathogens Co-evolution and gene transfer between hosts and invaders Biological control

Parasites and Pathogens of Insects

Author : Nancy E. Beckage
Publisher : Academic Press
Page : 320 pages
File Size : 12,1 MB
Release : 1993-07-29
Category : Medical
ISBN :

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Tripartite interactions between symbiotically associated entomopathogenic bacteria, nematodes, and their hosts. The insect immune proteins and the regulation of their genes. Interaction of bacillus thuringiensis endotoxins with the insect midgut epithelium. Viral pathobiology in relation to insect control. Baculoviruses, vertebrate viruses, and cytoskeletons. Baculovirus enhancing proteins as determinants of viral pathogenesis. Invertebrate transposable elements in the baculovirus genome: characterization and significance. Genetic manipulation of the baculovirus genome for insect pest control. Insect resistance to viruses. Biology and mechanisms of insect-cuticle invasion by deuteromycete fungal pathogens. Host-parasitoid-pathogen interactions.

Laboratory Guide to Insect Pathogens and Parasites

Author : G.O. Poinar Jr.
Publisher : Springer Science & Business Media
Page : 400 pages
File Size : 43,1 MB
Release : 2012-12-06
Category : Science
ISBN : 146848544X

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After the publication of the Diagnostic Manual for the Identification of Insect Pathogens, the authors received many queries asking why they had not included the larger metazoan parasites as well as the microbial forms. An examination of the literature indicated that pictorial guides to the identification of nematodes and the immature stages of insect parasites were unavailable. Consequently we decided to rewrite the sections cover ing insect pathogens and combine these with new sections on ento mogenous nematodes and the immature stages of insect parasites. The result is the present laboratory guide, which is unique in covering all types of biotic agents which are found inside insects and cause them injury or disease. Included as parasites are insects and nematodes. Among the pathogens included are viruses, rickettsias, bacteria, fungi, and protozoans. Emphasis is placed on identification with an attempt to use the most easily recognizable characters. Use of a certain number of technical terms is unavoidable, and explanations of these can be found in most biological dictionaries or the glossary of invertebrate pathology prepared by Steinhaus and Martignoni (1970).

Parasites and Pathogens of Insects

Author : Nancy E. Beckage
Publisher : Academic Press
Page : pages
File Size : 18,81 MB
Release : 1993-08-12
Category : Science
ISBN : 9780120844401

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Both volumes of Parasites and Pathogens of Insects provide in-depth coverage of the interface between insect parasites and pathogens and hosts, and explore the relationships between these partners. They emphasize biochemical and molecular interactions, basic biology, and the roles of hormones, receptors, and other cellular components in modulating interactions between host insects and attacking agents. These topics also are assessed in relation to biotechnology and biological control. In the short term, these volumes fill a void in current literature by emphasizing basic interactions at the biochemical and molecular levels. In the long term, these interactions may provide avenues for exploitation to enhance the rate of "beneficial" parasitism or to reduce the rates of disease transmission and infection of vertebrate hosts.

Biology of Blood-Sucking Insects

Author : Mike Lehane
Publisher : Springer Science & Business Media
Page : 301 pages
File Size : 38,23 MB
Release : 2012-12-06
Category : Science
ISBN : 9401179530

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Blood-sucking insects are the vectors of many of the most debilitating parasites of man and his domesticated animals. In addition they are of considerable direct cost to the agricultural industry through losses in milk and meat yields, and through damage to hides and wool, etc. So, not surprisingly, many books of medical and veterinary entomology have been written. Most of these texts are organized taxonomically giving the details of the life-cycles, bionomics, relationship to disease and economic importance of each of the insect groups in turn. I have taken a different approach. This book is topic led and aims to discuss the biological themes which are common in the lives of blood-sucking insects. To do this I have concentrated on those aspects of the biology of these fascinating insects which have been clearly modified in some way to suit the blood-sucking habit. For example, I have discussed feeding and digestion in some detail because feeding on blood presents insects with special problems, but I have not discussed respiration because it is not affected in any particular way by haematophagy. Naturally there is a subjective element in the choice of topics for discussion and the weight given to each. I hope that I have not let my enthusiasm for particular subjects get the better of me on too many occasions and that the subject material achieves an overall balance.

Parasites and Pathogens

Author : N.E. Beckage
Publisher : Springer Science & Business Media
Page : 370 pages
File Size : 34,88 MB
Release : 1997-07-31
Category : Science
ISBN : 9780412074011

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When Nancy Beckage and I first met in Lynn Riddiford's laboratory at the University of Washington in the mid 1970s, the fields of parasitology, behavior, and endocrinology were thriving and far-flung--disciplines in no serious danger of intersecting. There were rumors that they might have some common ground: Behavioural Aspects of Parasite Transmission (Canning and Wright, 1972) had just emerged, with exciting news not only of the way parasites themselves behave, but also of Machiavellian worms that caused intermediate hosts to shift fundamental responses to light and disturbance, becoming in the process more vulnerable to predation by the next host (Holmes and Bethel, 1972). Meanwhile, biologists such as Miriam Rothschild (see Dedication), G. B. Solomon (1969), and Lynn Riddiford herself (1975) had suggested that the endocrinological rami of parasitism might be subtle and pervasive. In general, however, para fications sites were viewed as aberrant organisms, perhaps good for a few just-so stories prior to turning our attention once again to real animals. In the decade that followed, Pauline Lawrence (1986a,b), Davy Jones (Jones et al. , 1986), Nancy Beckage (Beckage, 1985; Beckage and Templeton, 1986), and others, including many in this volume, left no doubt that the host-parasite combination in insect systems was physiologically distinct from its unparasitized counterpart in ways that went beyond gross pathology.

Parasitic Insects

Author : Richard Robinson Askew
Publisher : Heinemann Educational Publishers
Page : 344 pages
File Size : 37,7 MB
Release : 1971
Category : Insects
ISBN :

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Mouthparts of parasitic adult insects; Lice; Fleas; Blood-sucking flies; Diptera pupipara: louse flies and bat flies; Bugs, earwigs, beetles, and moths that are parasitic as adults; Blood-sucking insects as vectors of human disease; Parasitic hymenoptera; Protelean parasitic diptera; Biological control of insect pests; Protelean parasites in the orders neuroptera, lepidoptera, and coleoptera; Strepsiptera; Commensalism, inquilinism, and social parasitism; Flies that parasitise vertebrates; Some general remarks.

Endocrine Interactions of Insect Parasites and Pathogens

Author : J. P. Edwards
Publisher : Garland Science
Page : 314 pages
File Size : 20,78 MB
Release : 2001
Category : Science
ISBN : 9781859962176

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Endocrine Interactions of Insect Parasites and Pathogens is one of the first books to concentrate specifically on the endocrine aspects of host/parasite and host/pathogen reactions. Written by well-known researchers in the field, the book is an up-to-date compendium and provides a thorough review of the current research.

Diagnostic Manual for the Identification of Insect Pathogens

Author : George Poinar
Publisher : Springer Science & Business Media
Page : 226 pages
File Size : 41,90 MB
Release : 2012-12-06
Category : Science
ISBN : 1468424394

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This manual was prepared for the diagnosis of insect diseases caused by infectious agents. The agents (or pathogens) included here are fungi, protozoans, bacteria, viruses, and rickettsias. The present work was prepared after much deliberation and discussion with students and teachers who felt a guide of this type would be valuable for diagnosing the microbial diseases of insects. It was modeled after a seminar given on the same subject at Berke ley, which had as its major goal the recognition and identification of insect pathogens for practical purposes. The present work in cludes numerous timesaving "short cuts" which were developed after years of experience of diagnosing insect diseases. Although emphasis is placed on identification, general back ground information on the various pathogens is also included. Thus, under each of the five groups of pathogens, the following topics are discussed: (1) various types of associations with insects, (2) defini tion and classification, (3) general life cycle, (4) characteristics of diseased insects, (5) factors affecting natural infections, (6) methods of examination, (7) isolation and cultivation, (8) important taxonomic characters, (9) tests for infectivity, (10) storage, (11) an illustrated key to the genera (or group in the case of viruses), and (12) literature, especially that pertaining to identification. Although often included with insect pathogens, entomogenous nematodes are not covered here since illustrated keys to those gen era that infect insects are already available (Poinar, 1975, 1977).